Extract Up


The good people over at Black Library have put up a beefy extract from 'Redemption Corps' for your perusal.




Enjoy.

Beware Geeks Bearing Gifts...



What is a geek? Am I a geek? Are you? It's difficult to find an agreed definition because it is a word that has changed over time. Geeks themselves have not changed - the rest of the world has re-orientated itself around them and therefore the label used to denote them. Stereotypes from the worlds of fiction, television and cinema abound and are too many to mention. We all know what we're talking about.
000Many of these characterisations are fairly derogatory but still harbour nuggets of truth. Author Julie Smith provides some insight into this with her own description:
000"He was the very personification of a 'geek', a bright young man turned inward, poorly socialized, who felt so little kinship with his own planet that he routinely travelled to the ones invented by his favourite authors, who thought of that secret, dreamy place his computer took him to as cyberspace - somewhere exciting, a place more real than his own life, a land he could conquer - not some drab, teenager's room in his parents' house."
000Some might feel insulted at this representation but Smith doesn't simply label the character as a geek with traditional trappings. She hints at a life of quiet desperation - a desire for something more - but explores to some extent one mechanism that the character has for dealing with the inherent banality and trivial disappointment of modern life. What the archetypal Chav blocks out with alcohol, violence (and market stall Burberry), the geek blocks out with passionate intensity - whether it be for the technical, scientific or fantastical.
000There has been a shift of late in the perception of the geek. Mainstream works of fiction are increasingly selecting geeks as their heroes, without referential nods to previous incarnations. Younger children can be harsh in their perceptions of the world: flick on Cartoon Network and you will be bombarded with crude representations of geek stereotypes, many situated for comic purpose and at best as necessary side kicks to the main character. Recent shows like 'Phineas and Ferb' place geeks unapologetically at the heart of their concepts and storylines - each episode unashamedly quirky and clever, encouraging young audiences to share in the delight of geekish capabilites and the boon of expertise and learning. On the other end of the spectrum, shows like 'QI' and personalities like Stephen Fry have enormous followings, shows where an enthusiasm for intellectual pursuit is respected and geek preoccupations are front and centre. Even the fashion world has acknowledged the influence of the geek in 'geek chic', where the style of cultural characters outside of the mainstream spectrum and the stereotypical features of geeks themselves have been adopted in lines and designs.
000This probably doesn't go far enough. Geeks in these examples are still very much on the periphery - which isn't a realistic interpretation of the world in which we live. As author China Mieville puts it, "Geeks run the world". If geeks are enthusiasts, people who are to one degree or another obsessed with intellectual pursuit for its own sake, then geeks and their influence are very much part of the fabric of modern life. I'm a teacher by trade. All teachers have chosen to become experts in their own fields in order that they might make experts out of others: because the world needs experts. Where would we be without the thousands of hours of intellectual pursuit that medical students commit to becoming doctors? Doctors are geeks. Musicians are geeks. Lawyers are geeks. Architects are geeks. Jounralists are geeks. Stock Market Traders are geeks. Comedians are geeks. Military advisors are geeks. Computer designers and technicians are geeks. Politicians are geeks. Arguably the most powerful person on Earth - Barack Obama - must be by that reasoning, a geek.
000It seems that the world is not ready to face that reality however. A leap forward requires two steps back. Extremely popular television shows (undoubtedly made by geeks) like Doctor Who and Glee might, on the basis of viewing figures, be considered mainstream guilty pleasures. People who do not consider themselves geeks watch them in their droves, despite the fact that these shows might be considered by geeks, for geeks, celebrating geek archetypal characters. Unfortunately the writers and producers of these shows failed to hold the line, however. They have betrayed the very sentiment that drove them to create / produce the shows in the first place. Within episodes of beginning, the geek icon that is the Doctor had to be legitimised in the popular mind by his coupling with Chavvy companions and Tardis visits restricted to periods in history that five year olds would recognise. The Glee Club did their stuff perfectly well for the first few episodes before legitimisation was required in the form of -yes, you've guessed it - cheerleaders and jocks joining the group (being just as good as the geeks who devoted their lives to the pursuit) and assuming half of the metaphorical and actual spotlight.
000Doesn't this take geeks back to being stuffed in lockers and the High School toilets of their 1980s cinemascapes? Isn't it time that the geek world order rallied? Time that the world faced the truth that it would be pretty screwed without geek guardianship? That geek movers and shakers, those with golden opportunities and influence over a wide range audiences, 'grow some' and have the courage of their convictions?